Demure fa Bellefonte, Pa., January 30, 1920. OLD LEM LIKKER. Suitable acknowledgements to the creator of the late Daniel Deever. “What are the whistles blowin’ for?” said Kickless Lemonade. “To turn you out in dozen lots,” cool Co- ca Cola said. “What makes you look so white, so white?” said Root-Beer-on-the-Ice. “I'm dreadin’ what we have to see,” Bra- zilla faint replies. For they're hangin’ Old Lem Likker, You can hear the Dead March play, Your Uncle Samuel's sentence is That he hang high today. They've taken off his license, criminal must pay, So they're hangin’ Old Lem Likker in the mornin’. and the “What makes the brewers breathe so hard ?”’ said Cherry Lemonade. “Their last faint hope has faded out,” the Lemon Phosphate said. “What makes the barkeep look so sad?” said Bevo from his bed, “All hope of gain is gone,” he said, “when Barleycorn is dead.” For they're hangin’ Old Lem Likker, And they're marchin’ of him round, And they’ve halted him beside His coffin on the ground. And he'll swing in half a minute, that old hell deserving hound. O they're hanging Old Lem Likker in the mornin’, “His place was here right next to mine,” said Claret Lemonade, “He's sleepin’ far from us tonight,” brown Coca Cola said. “We'll miss his high hilarity,” Pop replied. “He's a drinkin’ of the dregs toright,” said Seltzer on the side. For they're hangin’ Old Lem Likker, You must mark the time and place, For he killed his boon companion, And he poisoned half the race. He's the crime of all the country, Commonwealth's disgrace. 80 they're hangin’ Old Lem Likker in the mornin’, “What's that so black against the sun?” said Sour Mint Lemonade. “Lem Likker’s fightin’ hard for life,” Cold Coca Cola said. “What's that that whimpers overhead?” said Malto-on-the-Shelf. “Old Likker’s soul is passin’ now,” quoth Old Free Lunch himself. We are through with Old Lem Likker, You can hear the quick-step play, And we're all for prohibition. Let the dry flag wave. Hurray! Ho, the rummies are a shakin’, for they’ll miss their beer today, When we've hung Old Lem Likker in the mornin’. —C. H. McCrea, Wadena, Minn. Vanilla the A PIG UNDER THE FENCE. Cal looked down at his wheelbar- TOW. “Saves me the cost of hiring a horse and wagon,” he said, “and I'm trying to save all I can, as I told you. I've worked hard at something every vacation.” “I know. And I've been ashamed of you every vacation,” she retorted. “I vowed again and again I'd stop speak- ing to you. But you did so much bet- ter than the other boys in the High school, and looked so gentlemanly on the platform that I always overlooked your lapses. I was really proud of the way you represented our class when we graduated. Why don’t you |: try and get a gentlemanly position like Andy Bray and Andy Searles?” “Because I feel just as gentlemanly between the barrow handles, and I'm making twice what Arthur does at the bank or Andy in the real estate of- fice,” he answered. “In fact, I was of- fered Arthur’s job before he took it. I feel my time, with the future beyond, is worth more than $7 a week to me.” “But it’s so—so common and undig- nified,” she argued. “And it’s sure to eut you from society. I'd rather go in- to the drug store for a soda with Arthur or Andy on their salary, than with you on twice as much, even though I—I might like you better, and you could make a better appear- ance if you would. Why, I'm begin- ning to hear you spoken of as “Cal Cabbages.” It’s horrid.” Cal shook his head with a smile. Out near the edge of the town was a second-rate boarding house, kept by a woman who couldn’t afford a better one or one nearer the center. From the small margin above cost she had sent Adelaide Eliza, her only child, through High school. The girl had been in many of Calvin’s classes, and had graduated at the same time. But he knew very little of her. He remembered her chiefly as a defiant, black-eyed thing in a neat but out-of- date and much turned and darned clothing. Such of the girls as notic- ed Adelaide Eliza did it to ridicule and make her angry. Some of the boys did the same. They liked to watch the black eyes flash and the angry feet stamp. But they couldn’t ridicule her from school. The girl literally fought her way through, without a friend, and graduated with almost the highest honors. After graduating, she took no part in the later exercises or so- cial farewells. Calvin had been too much absorbed in his books to notice much. In all their schooling he hadn’t spoken to Adelaide Eliza half a dozen times— nor for that matter, much more with any of the girls except Louise, who had a seat near him and walked as far as her home on the same sidewalk. As he trundled his wheelbarrow out through the edge of the village, a sudden mild, protesting squeal rose directly in front. Rank weeds and bushes grew out- side, some of them nearly as high as the fence. Calvin ran his wheelbar- row a few more feet, then stopped ab- ruptly. A path had been worn through the weeds to the fence, and crouching in the path, straining back, her feet braced against a rail, was Adelaide Eliza, her two hands clutch- ing the hind legs of a pig. The rest of the pig was beyond the fence, and he was struggling and squealing with all his force. At Calvin’s appearance the girl twisted her neck to look at hi m. “Q, sir knight,” she cried, with mock piteousness, “come to the help of a poor distressed maid. I can’t hold on, and I daren’t let go.” Cal dropped the barrow handles and hurried to the fence. “What shall I do?” he asked. “I don’t know. It’s our vig. He's been through this hole into Mr. Witt’s garden twice. Mr. Witt swore he'd kill him and sue mother for damages the third time. This is it. I chased and caught piggy at the critical mo- ment. He isn’t all in the garden. Now what shall I do, Solomon of the books? Think up something.” “No need. Got it in my pocket,” laughed Cal, as he vaulted the fence. “What part?” “Just to your left—those cabbages. See, there’s one half eaten. He'll go straight to that. It’s piggy’s nature.” Cal drew a package from his pock- et and bent over the cabbage head for a moment. As he vaulted back over the fence he sneezed. “Now let him go,” he said. Adelaide Eliza looked up at him questioningly. She was accustomed to tricks. But Cal had never played her one. Of all the schoolboys he was the only one in whom she felt confi- dence. “Poison ” she said, doubtfully— “damages?” “Neither. Let him go.” She released her grasp. Cal caught ! her arm and assisted her up quickly, then drew her aside. “Give him full right of way,” he ad- vised. “He may be in a hurry.” Piggy had shot into the garden with squeals of defiance and triumph. He believed he had beaten his adversary. In a moment his mouth was full of cabbage. A second of amazed inquiries with his snoot in the air, as though chal- lenging the world in general, then piggy whirled, shot back under the fence and sped down the road with frenzied squeals of angry protest. Adelaide Eliza’s eyes followed him wonderingly. “What does it mean?” she asked. “Why, he’s too heavy for us to car- ry, you know, so I'm making him car- ry himself. It’s so much easier. Watch.” Sure enough! A few hundred yards down the road was a house with its front gate open. Piggy spsd in still squealing. “What does it mean?” she repeat- “Just red pepper. I've been using it on a bit of our California privet hedge, where the fence is low. Stray cows have a way of reaching over and nibbling. But the red pepper stops them—awakens their conscience with- out harming them any you know. Your pig won’t bother this garden any more.” Adelaide Eliza burst into a long, merry peal of laughter, her eyes dancing. “It’s the fun—funniest thing I ever heard of,” she choked. “You're a wonder.” Cal acknowledged with a grin. He was reconsidering his opinion of Ad- elaide Eliza. She was full of fun, and, yes, he realized with a good deal of surprise, she was much prettier than Louise. He had an odd feeling that, by acting the way it did, the school had lost much. “I’m coming round tomorrow to see if that pig holds spite,” he said, as they walked side by side, he trundling the barrow. “I wonder if he’ll shake paws. ‘And I'm glad we live so near each other. Now there are no school books to take our time, we ought to become better acquainted.” “I’ll be so glad to,” she answered simply. “I never seemed to make friends at school. I'll be glad to have one.”—By F. H. Sweet. Smokers Scratch 40,000 Matches Every Second—15 Seconds Each Scratch. Next time you light a match think of this: About 10,000 matches are scratched in this country every second that passes, and of these 95 per cent. are used for smokers to fire pipe, cigar or cigarette. The man whose head for figures turned out this information also es- timates that the time lost by the smokers in lighting matches not in smoking—is worth $513,024 each eight-hour working day. He arrived at this estimate by fig- uring that it takes 15 seconds to scratch a match and use the light, and that 2,133,759 men, whose time is 30 cents an hour are holding matches at the same time, thus losing golden minutes at the rate of $1,068 a min- ute or $64,128 an hour. No one, so far as we can learn, has figured out how large a percentage of the match scratchers throw away the matches while they are still burning; but it has been estimated that half of the fires, which cost the United States $250,000,000 a year are caused by carelessness. Wood, phosphorus, chlorate of pot- ash, rosin, whiting and powdered flint are the making of this little device.— Popular Science Monthly. Wood Asher Too Valuable to be Wasted. The Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture reminds farmers and others who are burning wood for fuel that wood ashes contain the mineral matter that the trees, from which the wood was obtained, took from the soil when they grew. Wood ashes, therefore, are valuable for making the soil fertile. If they have not leached, that is, if they have not been exposed to water, they obtain much potash and some phosphoric acid and a large percentage of vegetable lime, but no nitrogen. If they have been leached the potash has been mostly washed out. Much wood is still being consumed in rural sections for fuel, particularly at this time, due to the scarcity and high price of coal. Besides the price of commercial fertilizer is high and the practice of permitting waste is wrong. We are now living under changed conditions and in order to obtain the best results in farming as in everything else, the little things must not be overlooked. | HERE ARE THE SIGNS OF INDI- GESTION. You May Have Them and Hardly Recognize Them. A Perfect Di- gestion is Very Rare. Perhaps I ought to say in the begin- ning that I am not going to talk to the chronic dyspeptic but to the ordi- nary man and woman, the majority of whom, at one time or another and to a greater or less extent, have suffer- ed or are suffering from indigestion. Also, without hair-splitting distine- tions I am going to use the term di- | gestion in the sense commonly accept- ed—a failure on the part of the stom- ach to digest the food put into it. The symptoms are so familiarly known that I hardly need mention them; nearly everybody has had them, | for a perfect digestion is almost asi rare as a perfect character. Have you | ever had heartburn? Do you exper- | ience after eating, even a moderate | meal, an uncomfortable feeling of | fullness? Does your medicine chest ! contain pepsin and soda-mint tablets | intended for your own use? Have you ever had pain in the stomach? Are you aware of the fact, except! that you read it in a book on physiol- | ogy, that you have a stomach at all? And perhaps, if you are familiar | with these symptoms individually and | collectively, if you are one in the au- | dience who holds up his hand and pleads guilty, you have wondered why it is that indigestion ever intrud- ed himself into your life, have resent- ed his interference with your enjoy- ment of food, and have looked upon | him as an enemy—one who is always | taking the joy out of life. For indigestion, as everyone knows | who has had it, does that. People with otherwise amiable dispositions grow crabbed, hard to live with; char- itable people become cynics; optimists become pessimists. Certain great writers have given the world a for- bidding philosophy because they had indigestion. Carlyle said Great Brit- ain was inhabited by forty million people mostly fools, and Carlyle was a confirmed dyspeptic. And yet, as I shall show, indiges- tion is not an enemy but one of the best friends you have—just as pain is, for it is pain that waves a red lantern across the track of your life to tell you there is danger just ahead. I might say that Indigestion is the guardian angel of your stomach. If you disregard him there may be ser- ious trouble ahead; if you listen to him, and listen intelligently, he will help tell you what and how you can eat in order that you may retain a healthy body, a good disposition, and continue to enjoy the pleasures of a howmal appetite throughout a long ife. But how to listen intelligently— that is the question; for indigestion is many times not specific in his warn- ings; you know he is present, but you do not know why; you do not know wherein you have offended your stom- ach; you cannot spot the particular article of diet that is upsetting you. And the trouble may lie not in any special thing or things you eat, may lie not in food itself at all, but inthe preparation and use of that ood am going to call attention, therefore, to a few ordinary, every day abuses, many of which you may never have considered as abuses at all. One of the chief causes of indiges- tion is the use of too much seasoning in food. Right here lies the reason why so many families that boast of their good cooking, that have a name in the community for preparing deli- cious dishes, are families of dyspep- tics, and tend to make everybody who accepts their hospitality dyspeptics like themselves. If you will think, you will probably remember such a home, where to be invited to a Sunday or Thanksgiving dinner meant joyful anticipation and painful reaction. Recall the meal you ate that day; the turkey dressing was stuffed with onions and sage which you probably tasted for hours after- ward, a sure sign that they had not agreed with you. The side dishes were numerous and richly flavored, the dessert was heavy and very sweet —plum pudding, we’ll say, with hard sauce, or richly spiced pumpkin pie. All the dishes were highly seasoned; therein lay the secret of the fine cook- ing; and therein probably lay the fuss of the indigestion which follow- Salt is the only seasoning required by the body; that it is essential to health we all know, and yet the use of salt is so abused that I do not ex- aggerate when I say that the average person takes daily from three to five times as much salt as he requires. The trouble begins in the kitchen, where the salt box is too convenient to the cook’s hand; it is continued in the dining-room, where the saltcellar is too convenient to the diner’s hand. It is not confined to the home. Watch the average man in a restaurant or hotel. A steak is placed before him. Now the juices of a good steak are especi- ally rich in flavor and need no addi- tional seasoning to make them tempt- ing and palatable to any appetite that is not worn out. But wiithout ever tasting the steak. the man reaches for the saltcellar and begins to sprinkle, The side dishes, the potatoes, and the bread very probably contain plenty of salt for his meal. What he puts on his steak is just that much too much. But not only is the saltcellar con- venient—so is the pepper box; and having sprinkled salt the man next sprinkles pepper. In fact, with many people this twin operation is a part of the routine, like unfolding the napkin; like a formula, before eating they say, “Pass the salt and pepper, please.” Now, pepper is not only not needed by the system, it is an irritant which inflames the stomach. We all know that, snuffed up the nose, it causes us to sneeze violently, and a sneeze is nature’s attempt to get rid of an irri- tating substance. In other words, the nose resents pepper. Now, the membrane of the stomach is not near- ly so sensitive to pepper as that of the nose; but just as surely the stomach resents it, certainly too much of it, only the stomach has no sneeze with which to register its protest. ‘Understand me—I do not say you should never eat pepper on your. food; pepper, by irritating the stomach, in- creases the flow of digestive juices, and is used—that is, cayenne or red pepper, which is less injurious than | black—in some prescriptions whose purpose it is to spur up the appetite | and digestion. But no reputable phy- | sician would continue such a prescrip- ‘ tion indefinitely; it is used only in { emergency. Every unnatural increase in the flow of digestive juices is fol- lowed by a decrease; if you spur na- | ture on today, she lags behind tomor- ‘row; and you are spurring her to an ! unnatural pace when, day after day, ' meal after meal, you sprinkle pepper ! on your food. And what I have said of pepper is | true of mustard to an even greater iextent. You know what happens i when you put a mustard plaster on your back; well, remember that the ! membrane of the stomach is many times more sensitive than the skin of the back. And the same thing holds good with regard to many spices— ing; that the table ginger, horseradish, pungent cheeses, ! and the various “hot sauces.” The undue craving for hot and pun- gent seasoning is a sign of a worn out or vitiated appetite; and the con- stant and liberal use of them in turn | wears out and vitiates the appetite. If you use them, do so sparingly. If you have got to the point where you | crave them, where your meal tastes flat without them—then do not use them at all. Most people eat too much, and that in spite of the fact that this state- ment has been made over and over again, and in spite, also, of the high cost of living. For one thing, eating is a social function which causes peo- ple to linger at the table—which is a good thing if they will spend a con- | siderable part of the time talking as well as eating. For another thing, appetite is overestimated by season- ing, as I have said, and also by ar- ranging the dishes in climax, the least , tempting ones being served first, the i most tempting ones last. | In many homes every effort is | made to induce people to eat as much | as they can possibly hold, by leading ‘them from good, to better, to best. People sometimes groan inwardly when the dessert is brought in. “If I had known that was coming,” they ' it.” But because the dessert is good, and the housewife insistent, they “make room.” Eating too much, though, is not al- together a question of eating too great an amount. We need a certain bulk of food to give the stomach something to work on. Books that claim to look into the future see the day coming when food will be packed in a capsule or tablet, and when the business man will stop dictating a moment, take his lunch in tabloid form, swallow a glass of water, then go on with his correspondence. Such a day will never come, though; certainly not until, in the long process of evolution, our stomach shrinks to the size of our present appendix, and our digestive apparatus undergoes a radical change. Some years ago would-be food reformers succeeded in getting a condensed diet into the Eng- lish army, and it was this which caus- ed Kipling to say, “Compressed veg- etables and meat biscuit may be nour- ishing, but what Tommy Atkins needs is bulk in his inside.” And Kipling was right. That’s one reason why we need veg- etables and fruits. Most vegetables and fruits contain a low amount of food value in proportion to their bulk. They give the stomach something to do without demanding of it the hard work of digesting highly concentrat- ed food. The stomach, like the mus- cles, needs exercise. Also, bulky food tends to prevent constipation, and helps overcome it, where it already exists. The man who ate eggs for break- fast, bean soup and a ham sandwich for lunch, a steak with French fried potatoes and a pudding dessert for dinner, has eaten too much—not in bulk, perhaps, but in contracted food, for egg and steak and beans are of this kind. It is possible that he has not even taken bulk enough; perhaps he hasn’t even satisfied his appetite, which fact makes him feel virtuous and abstemious. He ought to have taken some bulky foods that would have satisfied his appetite, given his stomach normal work to do, and help- ed eliminate the waste. Such foods are most of the vegetables, especially cabbage, cauliflower, carrots, spinach, parsnips, turnips, lettuce and all greens, and practically all the fruits, the acids of which also help to over- come any tendency to constipation. Food does three things to the body —it rebuilds waste tissue, it supplies heat and energy, and it puts on fat. There are three divisions of food: food rich in protein, which rebuilds waste tissue; foods rich in carbo-hy- drates, whick supply heat. and ener- gy, and also build up flesh; and fats, which do pretty much what the car- bo-hydrates do, supply heat and en- ergy. The foods richest in protein are lean meats, the white of egg, milk, cheese, and peas and beans; the foods richest in carbo-hydrates are rice, po- tatoes, macaroni, white bread, and particularly sugar. The fats are but- ter, cream, bacon and other fats of meat, olive and other oils. Of course I have only touched the subject; most people have been edu- cated in food values by now. The point I want to make is this—that you may not be eating either too much food or too highly seasoned food, but you may be eating too much of one group or another. In other words, your diet may not be balanced. The next generation will be more familiar with the balanced ration than the present one, and we know far more about it than our fathers and mothers did. Our children today can tell us the right proportions of pro- tein, carbo-hydrates and fats which ought to go into our food; they learn it in school, particularly the girls. Do not laugh at them, but listen when they talk of these things—they are the words of wisdom. If you are a mother, let your daughter, just through a course in do- mestic science, come into the kitchen; if she wants to revolutionize the fami- ly fare, it might be a good thing to allow her to do it. She may tell you that the state of mind you are in when you eat has a good deal to do with in- to banish trouble while you are eat- is no place for family rows, and that, if you must: row, you should do so between meals. | These, also, are words of wisdom, for experiments in artificial feeding have shown that when a man is angry or frightened or worried or even ex- cited, . does not digest even digesti- | ble and well-prepared foods. Don’t’ go too far with this idea, however. Freedom from troublesonme thoughts or excitement will not enable you to | digest indigestible food. ; And things do not stand still, not: - even indigestion; you will either get better or worse. The mild and infre- | quent symptoms may become more se- | vere and more frequent, and turn in- | to more serious symptoms—pain, for instance, which, as I have said, is a red lantern waved across the track of your life. Ahead may lie ulcer of the | stomach; and ahead of that the fatal | enemy, cancer. | Iam not an alarmist, and the stom- ach is tolerant; it will overlook many abuses; but constant dripping wears away a stone, and constant abuse and carelessness in this matter of eating | | is apt to injure even the stoutest stomach. ! And, unfortunately, indigestion | does not always warn you that you | are eating too much. Every physi- | cian is familiar with the type of man who at middle age or below that point comes into the office for an examina- tion—the stout, ruddy, hearty man who “never was sick a day in his life” . and “who doesn’t know what indiges- tion is,” but who of late has been feel- ing “all down and out.” Questions sometimes reveal the fact that all his life such a man has eaten like a gourmand—steak for breakfast, and a big one at that, and | smothered in onions, a heavy lunch containing more meat, and an enor- mous dinner of rich and highly sea- soned foods. And examination of this type of | man too frequently shows high blood pressure, hardening of the arteries, maybe kidney trouble. Many times the man’s usefulness is past, his ar- teries those of an old man—and a .man is as old as his arteries; and the say, “I might have saved room for. only explanation of his condition seems to be that he has been busily engaged in digging his grave with his teeth. Indigestion would have been a friend in that it would have warned Lim Jong ago.—By Robert H. Rose, The Value of Automobiles. The recent assertion that three- fourths of the automobiles of the world are owned in the United States and that nine-tenths of those now in the whole world were produced in our own manufacturing establishments lend interest to a compilation by the National City bank of New York, re- garding our exportation of automo- biles from the earliest date to the present moment. These figures show that the exports of automobiles and parts, including : tires and engines, have in the twenty | i digestion; that you ought, if possible, years aggregated about $1,000,000,- 200. The year 1919 surpassed all rec- ords. The value of automobiles and parts exported in 1919 aggregated approxi- mately $185,000,000 as against $140,- 000,000 in 1916, the former high rec- ord; $38,000,000 in 1914, all of which immediately preceded the war; $11, 000,000 in 1910; $2,500,000 in 1905, and slightly less than $1,000,000 in 1902. Of the $185,000,000 worth of automobiles and parts exported in 1919, $35,000,000 worth were com- mercial cars, $75,000,000 passenger, $41,000,000 000,000 worth of automobile engines. France, formerly a very large man- ufacturer of automobiles, is showing a remarkable appreciation of the American commercial machine, the to- tal number of commercial automobiles sent to that country in 1919 having been about 3600, valued at more than $15,000,000. Great Britain, which took a large number of commercial machines during the war period, is now apparently manufacturing them for herself, for the total value of com- mercial machines sent to that country has fallen from $20,000,000 in 1917, and nearly $7,000,000 in 1918, to only about $500,000 in 1919. “Sixty countries and colonies took American commercial machines in 1918 and the number of countries tak- ing passenger machines was eighty. Iceland took in 1918 forty passenger machines at a value of $34,000, and one commercial machine, valued at $2,245. : The imports of automobiles into the United States, which have aggregated $31,000,000 since the first record, that of 1906, have declined from the high- water mark of $3,837,000 in 1910, to $624,709 in 1919. ‘Skunk Skins High. What some authorities regard as the most widely distributed fur in the United States is the skunk’s, for the animal is not driven out by civiliza- tion; it has even been trapped in the suburbs of the largest cities. At a recent fur auction in New York skunk skins sold at $9 each. Forty years ago skunk skins brought from 15 cents to 60 cents; in 1887 $1.25 was considered a good price for one of good quality. They range in price now from five cents for the poor Texas civet skin to $12 fora fine Canadian black. The thick, glossy character of the skunk’s fur and the variety of uses it can be put to by shearing, dyeing, etc.,, have given it a great value. Practically all skunk skins are manu- factured into furs and coats for wom- en’s wear, and much of the product is sold under other names. The animal varies in size from spe- cies like a large rat to those about the size of an extra large cat. The coloring varies with the species but generally it is black with white stripes extending from the head to the shoulders and then dividing and run- ning high up along the sides to the tail. A Quibbler. “The last time you told me you'd never borrow a dollar again as long as you lived.” eer Primera rior - | not until later. “parts of automobiles,” nearly $30,000,000 tires and about $5,- | FARM NOTES. When eggs do not hatch well early in the season there is time to find the reason for the poor hatching and to cure it before the season is too far advanced. When late hatching is not successful the crop of poultry is cut short and the egg production falls. Early hatched cockerels are ready for the market when prices are high- est. Early hatched pullets mature be- fore cold weather and lay when prices of eggs are highest. Late-hatched chickens are not mature before cold weather sets in and often will not lay until spring. Early hatched pullets, if properly grown, ought to begin laying in Oc- tober or early in November and con- tinue to lay through the winter. Yearling hens seldom begin laying much before January 1 and older hens It is the November and December eggs that bring high prices. The laying breeds should be- gin laying when about from 5 to 6 months old, general purpose breeds at 6 to 7 months, and the meat breeds at 8 to 9 months. The early chicks develop to a stage where they can withstand extreme heat and an attack by the parasites | which are more numerous and trou- | blesome in hot weather. heat is apt to check the growth of the late chicks and in their weakened con- dition they easily become a prey to lice and mites. When the cold, wet weather comes in the fall they are pe- , culiarly susceptible to it and likely to develop colds, while the vigorous ear- ly chicks find the coolness stimulat- ing. There are people who have the right | variety of fowls who house and feed them properly, and yet who cannot obtain eggs early in the winter be- cause their fowls are too old. It sel- dom pays to keep hens for laying after they are 2% years old; not that they will not give a profit, but that younger fowls will give a greater profit. A great many poultrymen who make a specialty of winter egg production keep nothing but pullets, disposing of the 1-year-old hens be- fore it is time to put them in winter quarters. The champion of the girls’ poultry clubs of Mississippi keeps nothing but pullets. —It is the Early Hatched Bird that Gets the Price.—Chickens can be hatched at any time of the year, but it is the chickens hatched early in the spring that give the best results. One reason is that if no special effort is made to hatch early on the farms throughout the country the hatching season coincides too closely with the planting season, and hatching opera- tions are reduced on that account. Early hatched chicks, as a rule, are the strongest and most vigorous in the flock because they are produced from eggs laid while the hens are in their best breeding condition. After | a long period of laying the hens lose | something of their vitality and their capacity to transmit vigor to their off- i spring, and so late-hatched chicks are | on the whole decidedly inferior to ear- ly hatched ones in vigor and consti- tution. Because they are thrifty and vigorous the early chicks make quick- er and better growth than the late ones. Thrifty chicks get more from a given quantity of food than others. Weak and undersized birds often con- sume as much feed as the larger and better developed ones but make no perceptible growth. _ —Tuberculosis may be introduced into a healthy herd, says the United States Department of Agriculture, by any of the following means: By the addition of an animal that is affected with the disease; therefore, animals should be purchased only from herds known to be free from tu- berculosis, or from herds under su- pervision for the eradication of the disease. By feeding calves with milk or oth- er dairy products from tuberculosis cows; this frequently occurs where the owner purchases mixed skim milk from the creamery and feeds it to his calves without first making it safe by boiling or pasteurization. By showing cattle at fairs and ex- hibitions; reports have indicated that numerous herds become infected through mingling with infected cattle at shows or by occupying infected premises. The shipment of animals in cars which have recently carried diseased cattle and which have not been disin- fected properly. Community pastures; pastures in which tuberculosis cattle are allowed to graze are a source of danger. In most cases the outward appear- ance of the animal bears no relation to the degree of infection. The dis- ease frequently developes so slowly that in some cases it may be months or even longer before any symptoms are shown; therefore, be on the safe side and have your herd tested. —How Leading States Rank in the Production of Peaches.—The fa production of peaches in 1918 was 34,000,000 bushels and, according to September estimates, in 1919 was 50,- 000,000 bushels. The commercial crop, in distinction from the farm production, for each of the past three years was as follows: In 1917, 29,- 000,000 bushels; in 1918, 21,000,000 bushels; in 1919 (September esti- mates), 29,000,000 bushels. These figures are taken from a compilation recently made for representatives of the Bureau of Plant Industry, United States Department of Agriculture, in connection with . a comprehensive study of the peach industry in the United States and the production of various districts. It was found that 34 States have an annual average production of more than 100,000 bushels each, Idaho's crop being the smallest of the 34, and California’s crop the largest. The latter’s average annual production of peaches for the five-year period 1912- 1916, inclusive, was 9,669,000 bushels. Georgia ranked second with 4,550,000 bushels, Arkansas third with 3,603,000 bushels, Texas fourth with 2,877,000 bushels, and Missouri fifth with 2,- 670,000 bushels. While California far exce ds Georgia in yield, a large part of the former’s peach crop is used for drying and canning, and in shipments of fresh fruit Georgia normally leads “That’s so, and you’ll notice that I am borrowing fivers now.” all other States in seasons of a good crop. The severe